Threat To America: Border Danger ft. Tom Homan & Derek Maltz from Border911
E101

Threat To America: Border Danger ft. Tom Homan & Derek Maltz from Border911

Bijou McMillion:

Why should people care? Why should people care about our borders? Why should they care about the drug crisis? Every state is a border state.

Tom Homan:

Yep.

Bijou McMillion:

Fentanyl isn't just a drug, it is poison.

EmmaSara McMillion:

It's an epidemic. It's it needs to

Bijou McMillion:

be handled. All this is just coming in, and we have no clue how much, where, when.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

It's like the nation's immune system is being attacked right now.

Nile McMillion:

We had migrants die trying to cross into the United States last year. That is horrible.

EmmaSara McMillion:

Let's find out what the experts are saying on the front

Bijou McMillion:

line and why it's so important for us to understand the crisis.

Tom Homan:

I'll show you here more to save lives.

Derek Maltz:

And what's killing me is that this administration is enhancing the ability for the cartels to kill our kids. So shame on the American government for not connecting the doctors. 92. I know y'all been waiting on some fire from me for a while. So without further ado, I'd give you further

Nile McMillion:

We got some shocking developments as the Texas National Guard is blocking access to Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas, preventing border patrol from accessing that section of the border. This also comes as governor Sarah Huckabee of Arkansas is deploying Arkansas National Guard troops to the southern border to reinforce the Texas National Guard under command of governor Greg Abbott.

Bijou McMillion:

And, you know, today we're gonna be having, a snippet from Tom Homan and Derek Maltz. Two men that have an incredible background. Tom Homan is the CEO of Border 911. And fantastic, fantastic interview. He was at America Fest with you all.

Bijou McMillion:

And it was really

Nile McMillion:

It was great to meet Tom for sure.

Bijou McMillion:

It was really awesome for me to even just listen in to some of that. He was the, I believe, the former director of ICE, underneath Trump, and he has served in their 6 administrations. Yeah. So he's a he has a very powerful voice in the area of border crisis and all that. And then also we have Derek Maults, who was a former, director of special operations at the DEA.

Bijou McMillion:

And he has a powerful, powerful, story about Fentanyl. The just the overdoses in America and everything like that that's happening right now.

Nile McMillion:

It is a crisis.

Bijou McMillion:

It is, it is a crisis as well. And it's tied right in with the border as well. We'll also be showing that snippet of their interview that we shot a few weeks ago, but now we have this Texas development. So they were already saying this is something that could be happening and now it's happening. So, one of the other things that we just wanna talk about today is the Fentanyl crisis that is gripping our nation, and I think Derek will also be touching on that.

Bijou McMillion:

But my heart really for today is to show people that the border crisis is once it gets to your doorstep, it's no longer a crisis, but now it is an absolute disaster. And so don't let it get to that point and actually do something. Today is gonna be a very engaging conversation, and I'm really, looking forward to it.

Nile McMillion:

And this episode is brought to you by culture of 1776.com. Culture of 1776 was founded by our friend, Hannah Faulkner, who we got to meet earlier this year at America Fest. Hannah is a young entrepreneur from Tennessee, and we just love her products. She is focused on making a clothing line that supports feminine and masculine values. If you enjoy having clothes that allows you to share and broadcast your values, you can go to culture1776.com and use the code word ignite, that's ignite, all capitals, for a 15% discount at checkout.

Nile McMillion:

Thank you so much, Hannah, for sponsoring this episode.

Bijou McMillion:

Thank you. Thank you. So we're gonna be having this interview here, and we're gonna, play it in just a few seconds. But I wanna talk to you 3 real quick first because you guys got to have this interview like at the last moment with Yeah. Tom.

Bijou McMillion:

Just tell me a little bit about just your meeting with them and how who who they are. So first of all, they are 2 guys.

EmmaSara McMillion:

I said I can hang out with these guys all day because they are, they have such passion. They have, everything about them is real. They're gritty. But what I love is that they're always about protecting and at the helm of everything I do, epitome of every single citizen's awareness, but the desire to to just even understand what's going on. And a lot of people have their head in the sound.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And so I really respect what they're doing with Border 911 because they've done, so much work already with administrations, but now they have, you know, taken on it's taken on a life of its own really. And I love that they're still continuing on with the message and the mission to protect our borders.

Bijou McMillion:

Absolutely. And right now with the the the temperature of what's going on with the border crisis and everything, and why why should people care? Let's talk about that a little bit before we get into this interview. Why should people care about our borders? Why should they care about the drug crisis?

Bijou McMillion:

Maybe maybe they're living in a northern state, maybe they're living in, I don't know,

Von-Kensington McMillion:

maybe South Dakota or something like that.

Nile McMillion:

With a recent development and maybe one of the reasons that you're watching this right now is I feel like the the border crisis has really been distributed across the nation with states like Arizona and Texas actually shipping migrants across the country to sanctuary cities, to New York, to Chicago, to Seattle, and it's really bringing this to literally by dropping this off on people's front desk. There's a term that a lot of people like to use, it's the nimbyism or not in my backyard, right? And it's like, oh, I want to support, human rights and I wanna support immigration and stuff like that, but not in my backyard. And I feel like this has really been dumped in a lot of people's lives right now, and a lot of people are suddenly starting to care. And

EmmaSara McMillion:

And rightfully so, so, they should care. And we we think about border states, but really when you're dealing with the drug problem and the drugs that are coming over the border and then they're going in and seeping into all the states, then it becomes a border situation in every state.

Bijou McMillion:

You know, one of the things that I love from watching the interview with Thomas, he said that every state is a border state.

Tom Homan:

Yep.

Bijou McMillion:

And if we have that kind of mindset of realizing that we have to defend the border, not just for the sake of that one border, but because each state itself now is, responsible. It's responsible and it's affected directly by it too. So

Von-Kensington McMillion:

I mean, even when we were on our way back from America Fest, we we were, on our when we were about to hop on our flight, we've seen migrants boarding buses to to go to New York and Chicago or whatever. We didn't get exactly where they're going, but there was, like, I think it was, like, 4 or 5 busloads that we've seen.

Bijou McMillion:

Yeah. And, you know, and just so people also understand our heart too is, you know, we are a Hispanic family. Yeah. Yeah.

EmmaSara McMillion:

We Yeah. My my dad was actually born in Mexico. Yeah.

Bijou McMillion:

So And, you know, we have a heart for all that. So I mean, it

Nile McMillion:

It's really it's really is a humanitarian crisis right now. Yeah. What we are seeing is we had migrants died trying to cross into the United States last year, which is just that's that's that is horrible.

Bijou McMillion:

Okay. So before we get into all of that real quick, we're gonna go into the episode. But I just wanted you all to understand is, like, yes, we have Hispanic background. My grandfather, like she mentioned, is Hispanic, from Mexico.

EmmaSara McMillion:

So this is important. My dad who's even born in Mexico, he was born there and he didn't come over well, he came around it when he was 10 years old. So I'm first generation on his family born here in the United States, but let's find out what the experts are saying on the front line and why it's so important for us to understand the crisis. We have some guests here today that I am so excited. We're at America Fest today.

EmmaSara McMillion:

We're here to make a change. We're here to ignite some fire within our community, within our nation, within our globe, and we have some heavy hitters here. We have Derek Maltz, former director, DA special ops division, and then we also have Tom Homan, former ICE director for president Trump.

Tom Homan:

This is

EmmaSara McMillion:

what I love about him is that he's got a lot of gusto. He's got a lot of punch, but he also is a funny guy. So I said, please, you guys. I want both of you guys on our show, and here they are. So God is good.

EmmaSara McMillion:

I will say that right now. They are from Border 911, so we have to say where they're representing right now. Now we're gonna talk about some serious topics right now. We're gonna talk about border, and we're gonna talk about the drug crisis. And what is your goal?

EmmaSara McMillion:

We're here at America Fest today. And as we're changing the culture, as we're shifting the culture, we'll start with Derek. Derek, let's talk about your specialty, drugs in our nation, about where we're going as a nation if we don't put or make a stop with what's going on currently.

Derek Maltz:

So thank you for having us. I mean, right now, we have the worst crisis that's ever been in the history of America on kids dying at record levels. We're losing about 9,000. And the Mexican cartels are dominating, the drug business in America, but unfortunately now it's poisoning. It's fentanyl poisoning that's coming in from these filthy dirty labs in Mexico, and the cartels are taking total advantage of the weak porous border.

Derek Maltz:

They are flooding American communities with these poisonous substances like we've never seen before. And families all over the country are waking up finding their kids dead in the bedrooms. We've never seen this before. This is not grandpa's opioid crisis. Yeah.

Derek Maltz:

We have an opioid addiction issue in America, but right now, we have a poisoning against our citizens. And the Chinese Communist Party with the Chinese criminals are behind it, and it's very scary. And what's killing me is that this administration is enhancing the ability for the cartels to kill our kids.

EmmaSara McMillion:

You know, this is so important because I think maybe you can explain to the audience because there's a lot of parents that are just they hear it. They hear it on the news. They hear the term. They hear the name of the drug. But can you explain to them why this is different for from the other garden variety of drugs out there?

Derek Maltz:

Well, for 1, Fentanyl that's being dumped in our country today is illicitly made in clandestine labs in Mexico. Okay? The Chinese criminals are providing all the chemicals and the cartels are taking total advantage of the kids. They're using social media. They're using all the Instagram, Snapchat, and, TikTok to deliver the the the drugs or the poison to these kids in the house.

Derek Maltz:

So it's like ordering a pizza. The kids are sitting in their bedroom. They they get on Snapchat. They get on Instagram. They order up a pill.

Derek Maltz:

They think it's Adderall. They think it's Percocet. They think it's oxy. But in fact, it's poisonous Fentanyl. Fentanyl only requires 2 milligrams to kill.

Derek Maltz:

The DEA this year alone sees 74,000,000 fake pills. And the DEA administrator has said that 7 out of 10 pills have a potentially lethal dose of Fentanyl. So do the math. 70% of 74,000,000 pills. So law enforcement is saving lives every day, But it's something we've never seen.

Derek Maltz:

This is not drugs. It's just poison. And that's what parents need to know.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And I you know, one thing I wanna make make clear here is that it's one thing to have a drug addiction and there's one thing to be pushing a pleasure experience,

Tom Homan:

but I

EmmaSara McMillion:

really feel like there's a murderous spirit behind this drug, a murderous spirit.

Derek Maltz:

Yeah. Because the the Chinese, Chinese Communist Party has unrestricted warfare. They wanna destroy America, and this is a strategic plan to take out the future generation of America. So shame on the American government for not connecting the dots. And now we have the Chinese coming in on a wide open border.

Derek Maltz:

Tom can explain that a lot better than me, but they're coming in at record levels. The Chinese nationals, the military age men, they're coming in, they're setting up marijuana grow operations. They're doing the money laundering for the cartels. And they're also now selling this very, very high pure THC marijuana, which is distorting our kids' brains. So it's a gateway drug into, you know, this perfect storm of death and destruction.

EmmaSara McMillion:

I love and we're and I I really wanna hear from Tom too really quick, but this is such an important topic. So you said the THC is a gateway drug. And what we have to understand is that there are levels, and and this is what's what really jumped off to me is that with the Fentanyl is that it's not like, any other drug where you it takes time to get addicted to it or people have to be in drugs for a long time and they have overdose. People are, like, I mean, just one hit and they're dead without any addiction.

Derek Maltz:

Right. And so America has a very soft, you know, outlook about marijuana. They think it's safe. But this is not the marijuana from the seventies and the eighties nineties. This marijuana being produced by Chinese nationals that wanna destroy this country.

Derek Maltz:

So these kids, they don't even know what they're smoking and our congress and our leaders in government are actually encouraging marijuana use. So now, when these kids then order up a pill and they're in the bedroom, they're dying. And the same part is they don't know what they're getting. They're being deceived to death and that's the biggest thing that's changed. They don't know what they get.

Nile McMillion:

Okay. So we're gonna pause it right there and we're gonna stop to talk about that. Because man, that was a lot in just a couple of minutes right there.

Bijou McMillion:

And you know, he he went right down to the heart of the issue right away. He's like, Fentanyl isn't just a drug. It is poison. It is a level of poison because it's, I heard somebody talk about it. They're like, if you have a heroin addiction, you can check yourself into rehab.

Bijou McMillion:

But if you have a Fentanyl addiction, you're pretty much checking yourself into funeral

EmmaSara McMillion:

home. It's it's not Derek, Derek.

Tom Homan:

I mean, Fentanyl

Derek Maltz:

is 50 times

Tom Homan:

more important than heroin?

Bijou McMillion:

Absolutely. Yeah. It's 58 times. Yeah. And it's a 100 times more than morphine.

Bijou McMillion:

So

EmmaSara McMillion:

it's a 100 times stronger than morphine. Yep. Yep. And it's go ahead. I was gonna just say Derek actually said, you know, kids are supposed to learn from their mistakes, not die from their mistakes.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And as a mother with kids, I mean Yep. You know, and as somebody who was younger and sowed my wild oats and made my mistakes and learned from them and was able to grow and and become better through the lessons that I lived through, it's absolutely horrifying, shocking, and sad when you look at I I mean, I just went through story after story of the kids who lost their life, and they don't look strung out. I mean, a lot of these kids don't look strung out. They don't look addicted. They look like honor students, beautiful, cheerleading their lives out.

EmmaSara McMillion:

Time.

Tom Homan:

It could be their first time,

Von-Kensington McMillion:

you know, like, hey, you know, try this drug out. And it's just the first time and they can overdose, you know?

Bijou McMillion:

Absolutely. And this problem with this too is that, like you mentioned, these drugs are being laced inside of things that they don't know. So they were thinking, oh, I'm getting this Adderall, but it's really just a piece of chalk with Fentanyl inside of it. So it's it's a problem. I I told mama this story just like I told you this story last night.

Bijou McMillion:

It was, really heartbreaking, but these 2 teenager girls, they had went to a party, young, I think 17 19 years old. And, they had a pill, but they were like, you know, let's be whatever. Let's split it in half. Okay. So they each took half the pill.

Bijou McMillion:

1 and because these are mixed, not by professionals, they're just by whatever. One half of that pill had the full dose of the fentanyl and the other half didn't. And one sister died almost instantly and the other lived. And just like that from one pill. And that's how dangerous this stuff is.

Bijou McMillion:

2 milligrams of Fentanyl is all that it takes.

Tom Homan:

2 milligrams is just such a tiny amount. You

Von-Kensington McMillion:

can literally breathe it in. Like, there's an officer that was doing a Fentanyl, I mean, a drug stop, and he opened the trunk, and he immediately started overdosing just from breathing and the scent. And luckily, his, fellow cops saved him, but just opening the trunk and smelling it was enough to almost kill him. Shit.

Bijou McMillion:

The main thing is is that even if you think about 2 milligrams, that's the tip of a pencil. That is it's it's I think as what? Same as 10 grains of salt? It's just a ridiculously soft small amount and we're having this spend on being, you know, brought into the United States over the border at all these different locations because there wasn't any until Texas is now making the habit right now of saying, hey, we need checkpoints and we need it now.

EmmaSara McMillion:

Right.

Bijou McMillion:

It was just it was just being unregulated. Just all of us is just coming in and we have no clue how much, where, when, and

EmmaSara McMillion:

And I think,

Tom Homan:

you know,

EmmaSara McMillion:

as we're even talking about this, I love that we we got to do Tom together with Derek because together, their their mission is so dynamic because they're crossing, you know, they're they're making a web. They're making a wall. They're they're crossing over this information in October 28th, 2021. The Mexican army, k, the other side of the border, which is crossing the border, Mexican army seized a lab producing 70,000,000 fake pills a month. Okay?

EmmaSara McMillion:

And so you do that kind of math and that's a month and now they're where they want those, those, you know, drugs to come. They want to go where the money is. And so they're coming over here and they're crossing the borders because, Hey, it's easy. And people are crying about, oh, we need to be nice to the people next door and the people are next door, you know, are not all nice. And many in the majority of these people, you know, are coming over with, they want money, but they're coming over as murderers when they give our kill kids and people, and they're not, it's not all just kids, obviously, but adults and children who are getting into the babies.

EmmaSara McMillion:

I was reading, it was awful. A baby was crawling on the floor and her mom had done it that day apparently, and just got some on her, her hand and put her hand in her mouth and died. She had a drug overdose from crawling on the floor where it was. So it's, it's an epidemic. It's it needs to be handled and we need to safe for borders so that we can close off this spigot.

EmmaSara McMillion:

You know, a ridiculousness is killing our people and our nation.

Bijou McMillion:

Absolutely. And I was working, yeah, I was working on a documentary and we'll get back to this in a quick second, but I was working on gathering some information for a fentanyl documentary with a friend of mine. And it was just so heartbreaking to read all these different stories. But the more important thing, I think, even when we were working on it, I felt like it wasn't enough in the eye of the public to get support. And that was the more discouraging thing.

Bijou McMillion:

Not like, not the discouraging kind of way of like saying like, oh, well, we can't do it. It was more like discouraging, like people don't get it. They're not getting it. They're not getting that Fentanyl isn't just another drug. It's not just another opioid.

Nile McMillion:

Literally poison.

Bijou McMillion:

It is literally poison, and this is something that is detrimental.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And, you know, truly all drugs are poisonous, but the thing is This is

Bijou McMillion:

a lethal. Lethal.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

That's lethal. That's lethal. That's

Bijou McMillion:

a whole another level. Yeah. If you're taking it for the first time ever, this is this is what I was talking about with my friend Michael Carnes. We were just talking about it and he's like, people don't get it. Even people that I was working with on this production, they're like, my Hollywood friends.

Bijou McMillion:

Okay. I'm I'm from the film community. We're like, they go to parties, regular people, and then, you know, every once in a while, they're like, oh, well, let's do something recreational. Okay. Whatever you're celebrating.

Bijou McMillion:

I'm not I'm not that kind of person, but point is is they're doing it. And then, I think she said she had like 5 or 6 of her friends die, and she's only in her thirties. You know, I'm just thinking it it's just crazy to me. I was looking at the numbers for Kings County in Washington. Okay?

Bijou McMillion:

This isn't directly by the border. But in Kings County, in 2015, there was only 3 deaths related to fentanyl. 5 years later, it was like 100. And now, what is it? It's over a 1,000.

Bijou McMillion:

The the the increase of the deaths and every the overdoses in Fentanyl is just astronomical. And it's happening fast because why? The borders have been purposely let down, and I think that's a good segue right into what Tom is gonna say right here. So let's go ahead and watch what he says.

Tom Homan:

When president Biden, who's the first president in the history of this nation, to come in office an unsecured border. Under president Trump, we had the most secured border in my lifetime. I did this job for 35 years. I started in the border from 1984. I know the border.

Tom Homan:

I've worked for 6 presidents. Every president I worked for took steps to secure the border because they understood you can't have national security without border security. You gotta know who's coming and what's coming. President Biden is the 1st president in history in this nation who came into office and unsecured the border. And why did he do that?

Tom Homan:

People ask me that all the time. I think for a couple reasons. I think the Democratic Party sees millions of people as future Democratic voters. But we don't even have to get there. Because when Biden wrote 90 executive orders destroying everything we created, we also overturned the Trump census rule.

Tom Homan:

Now what does that mean? That means millions of people are releasing into United States that had no boom sanctuary cities. When we do the next census, what's the census do? That's what informs the the the the the seats in the house. So the millions of people in sanctuary cities is gonna result in more seats in the house than democrats.

Tom Homan:

They sold the security of this country house, the sovereignty of this country house for future political power. And I tell people all the time, under president Trump, we have illiberalization down 83, 90% at 45 year low. I'll say, you hear more to save lives. And I'll tell you why. Because when 90% less people are coming, how many women aren't being raped by the cartels?

Tom Homan:

How many pounds of fentanyl don't get through the border because 100% of the border patrol is on the line doing the national security seizing more fentanyl? How many 1,000,000,000 of dollars are the cartel not making the border secure? How many no suspected tariffs don't come to the border to get more secure? So I don't care what you know, a lot of people disagree with immigration. I don't care what their opinion is on immigration enforcement, but when you cause a crisis this big that overwhelms a border patrol where 70 to 90% of agents have been taken off the line, that creates a vulnerability for terrorism, especially for narcotics, for for for for, sex trafficking on women and children, and for anti smuggling.

Tom Homan:

I did a show this morning. I I explained the reason there's so much violence in Mexico right now because the cartels are making a record amount of money, smuggling, trafficking, women, children, and drugs, specifically fentanyl being run by the Seminole cartel. That's what's happening in this country. It all goes back to an unsecured border that this administration purposely unsecured. This isn't mismanagement.

Tom Homan:

This isn't incompetence. This is by design.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And this is what I want everybody to hear today. Okay? The more they love to hear.

Tom Homan:

Secure borders save lives. The secure border protects this country. I started border 911. It's a nonprofit. It's 501c3c4.

Tom Homan:

I started nonprofit for one reason. I brought the the the most talented border security experts, national security experts into this team. I got Mark Morgan, who's the CVP commissioner of Trump. I got I got Derek Moss, who knows the and the cartels, how they operate and how they're destroying this nation. I got Jason Jones, who retired from Texas DPS Intelligence Unit, that knows the cartel is probably better than anybody.

Tom Homan:

I got, mostly, I got I got Rodney Scott who spent his entire career in the borbetro. He started as a borbetro agent, works out stuff all the way up to be the chief of the National borbetro. I got Victor Avila who who worked for me and I, and he spent many years down next year working, at our TSA case. They're directly investigating cartel. I got Sarah Carter who spent 20 years investigating journalists.

Tom Homan:

I brought the best border people in the world as part of this team. And why? Because we might have spent the next year explaining to me why border security's important. So when you get to the voting booth next year, you're gonna vote for the man or woman, and I personally think it's president Trump, or you're you're gonna vote for the person who's gonna secure the border. President Trump's did it once.

Tom Homan:

He can do it again. That's what it's about. And I don't you know, again, I don't care what their opinion is on illegal immigration, but they need to understand. If we don't control the border, the illegal immigration overwhelms the border patrol so much. That's when the fattening up comes in.

Tom Homan:

That's when sex trafficking and women happen. That's when known as no as spectators gonna cross. So we're educating American people. Get to the Boeing booth. Educate yourself on border security matters, and vote for the person who's gonna secure the borders is gonna help reduce all this other stuff.

Tom Homan:

This country this country is being destroyed from inside out, and we can't we can't we can't tolerate. Unfortunately, we can't be the welfare nation for the entire world, but this country's in bad shape. And I want the America that I grew up in, a patriotic American, one that respect police, one that respects our military, and one that respects our sovereignty as a nation. You're not a country without borders, so hope the people get to the voting booth, please. I don't regardless who you vote for, use that privilege and go vote, and please go to border911.com.

Tom Homan:

Thanks.

Bijou McMillion:

Is there anything else that people should know, especially, like, let's even say about the no crisis and all that? What do people need to know about that?

Von-Kensington McMillion:

I'd say to educate your kids, you know, because the the ones that are affected by it are the are the kids of this world, you know. It's our generation that's really affected by it because they are the ones that don't have the fully developed head on their shoulders to, you know, realize what's going on. And the older generation aren't, they never were exposed to this kind of, you know, drug abuse. And so if we need to teach the older generation to teach the younger generation, so everybody is basically educated on the, the consequences of, you know, this open border and, you know, drugs coming in the arts.

Bijou McMillion:

Well, I would say on that note then is, yes. It's about education. I would say that all of the people need to understand that this isn't just for the druggies. This isn't just for the people that are already, you know, all that and, you know, it's unfortunate and they should get help. But I'm just saying for the regular person understand the risks because out of 10 pills, 7 of those could be have, fatal dose.

Bijou McMillion:

Yeah. Of Fentanyl inside of them and that's how pervasive it is

Tom Homan:

right now.

EmmaSara McMillion:

Even just on the because some people are just they're experimenting, you know, kids are are and they're fed so many opportunities

Bijou McMillion:

to 14 15 year olds are dead right now because of Fentanyl. It's because it's their first time ever. They wanna just, you know, have a little fun. They would do whatever.

Tom Homan:

They're just their friends.

EmmaSara McMillion:

They're just their friends. But there is

Bijou McMillion:

a conversation for parents to have. Right? Yeah. And I think schools, personally, I think like, you know, moms get drunk driving. They did a great job of having this, course that you have to take every time before you get your driver's license.

Bijou McMillion:

I think there should be something like that for the Fentanyl. I personally that's

EmmaSara McMillion:

what I do. And I would definitely go to Border 911 because they have different areas that you can look at specifically. I know that, Derek has, different promotions or that Derek has different programs that he offers. And I just saw something he posted on his wall today. I highly suggest following, them and seeing what they're doing because whatever they're connected to, it's with the heart of protection.

EmmaSara McMillion:

So, you know, I always go and follow the people who actually have a heart for what they're doing. And so that's so important. And you know, the one pill kills, there's that hashtag out there and there's a lot of families that have been impacted. And so for me, even, you know, because this is a TikTok generation, even letting your kids see this one pill kill on social media and seeing all the stories. I watched a a social media reel from a mom, and it was a kid who actually started a business.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And he his mom found a video of before he tried the Fentanyl. Obviously, he tried it and now he's not here any longer. So before he had just launched his business Like a teenager kid? He's about probably 17, but he launched a business made, he's actually chronically now. Like, I just did my 1st launch.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And so he had so much hope. He had entrepreneurship in him. He had, you know, a great smile. He had a lot of life in him, but he took that not. And I don't know how many times he took it, but he's dead now.

EmmaSara McMillion:

And he's a teenager with

Bijou McMillion:

so much a lot of times they do not know. You will not know. There's not an ingredient list on the itself.

EmmaSara McMillion:

So this topic was important. I just wanna thank everybody for watching and remember y'all go out and blaze change. Thanks for watching. We're ignite voices TV. Before you know it, it is that little ember that starts a whole fire across our nation of voices that will not be remained silent because our nation is a crisis.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

Yeah. A fire does need to be started in the voice of the citizens. This heartbreaking thing that our country

Tom Homan:

is getting destroyed. We don't really talk about it. It is the same way as the

Derek Maltz:

It is speaking truth and bringing light into darkness.

EmmaSara McMillion:

Ignite voices is bringing different voices in who are saying enough is enough.

Derek Maltz:

How can we sit back and complain when we see our country collapsing one community after other?

Nile McMillion:

Not even a a red or blue issue. It's a red, white, and blue issue.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

And we believe in freedom.

Tom Homan:

We

EmmaSara McMillion:

are diverting the lie that we should hate our nation, that we should not understand who we are as a people. It is causing confusion in the heart of humanity. I saw this terrifying agenda take over our public schools.

Bijou McMillion:

That all sounds very negative, but here's the good news. You are set free.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

That's exactly it. You do have power in the society. It's not too late. We are here to shift the culture's narrative. We're here to blaze change.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

I'm Von Kensingtoni. I'm Emma Sarah. Host of the Ignite Voice, the TV show. Remember, keep that torch lit. Go to ignite voices.com.

Von-Kensington McMillion:

Go out and blaze change.

Episode Video

Creators and Guests

EmmaSara McMillion
Host
EmmaSara McMillion
Host of Ignite Voices
Derek Maltz Sr
Guest
Derek Maltz Sr
RET Director, Special Ops Div. 28 yrs in fed law enf. Nat security and public safety executive. #LAWANDORDER👍🏻Brother died in Afghan, USAF🇺🇸 https://t.co/NWHbZYLAGn
Tom Homan
Guest
Tom Homan
President & CEO of BORDER911. Former Acting ICE Director, Retired Federal Agent.